The students who enter the classroom of high school science teacher Carl Warfield find themselves in the middle of a zoo. The innovative educator has turned his room into a home for snakes, spiders, lizards, birds, and a plethora of other animals.
Carl currently teaches at East Kentwood High School in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He’s been teaching for 23 years. He says he started bringing live animals into his classroom about 20 years ago. It started with just two animals, but now there are dozens. Carl is proud of his zoo. “It’s the classroom I always wanted to have,” he confessed. “I did not envision this growing to this, but it was just a way to say, ‘Hey, science is alive,'” the innovative educator said.
“It is a unique, hand’s on experience for the kids,” Carl explained. “We are one of those programs that, you know, you may not be an athlete, you may not be a musician, you may not be an artist. But if you’ve got heart, and compassion, and animals are your thing, we’ve got something here for you,” he continued.
In addition to his status as a local celebrity of sorts, Carl’s efforts in the classroom have won him financial recognition. He and his colleague, Shannon Goodwin, garnered a $1,000 check from Grand Valley State University, College of Education, for developing a salmon restoration program they call the Groundswell Project. The project offers students the opportunity to grow salmon in the classroom. The salmon are later released into the river, where they then migrate to Lake Michigan.
To read more about Carl Warfield, see this online article entitled Classroom or Zoo?